98%
921
2 minutes
20
Purpose: Photon radiotherapy techniques typically devote considerable attention to limiting the exposure of healthy tissues outside of the target volume. Numerous studies have shown, however, that commercial treatment planning systems (TPSs) significantly underestimate the absorbed dose outside of the treatment field. The purpose of this study was to test the feasibility of quickly and accurately calculating the total absorbed dose to the whole body from photon radiotherapy in individual patients.
Methods: We created an extended TPS by implementing a physics-based analytical model for the absorbed dose from stray photons during photon therapy into a research TPS. We configured and validated the extended TPS using measurements of 6- and 15-MV photon beams in water-box and anthropomorphic phantoms. We characterized the additional computation time required for therapeutic and stray dose calculations in a 44 × 30 × 180 cm water-box phantom.
Results: The extended TPS achieved superior dosimetric accuracy compared to the research TPS in both water and anthropomorphic phantoms, especially outside of the primary treatment field. In the anthropomorphic phantom, the extended TPS increased the generalized gamma index passing rate by a factor of 10 and decreased the median dosimetric discrepancy in the out-of-field region by a factor of 26. The extended TPS achieved an average discrepancy <1% in and near the treatment field and <1 mGy/Gy far from the treatment field in the anthropomorphic phantom. Characterization of computation time revealed that on average, the extended TPS only required 7% longer than the research TPS to calculate the total absorbed dose.
Conclusions: The results of this work suggest that it is feasible to quickly and accurately calculate whole-body doses inside and outside of the therapeutic treatment field in individual patients on a routine basis using physics-based analytical dose models. This additional capability enables a more personalized approach to minimizing the risk of radiogenic late effects, such as second cancer and cardiac toxicity, as part of the treatment planning process.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mp.14018 | DOI Listing |
J Chem Phys
July 2025
Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, 1090 Vienna, Austria.
Rare event sampling algorithms are essential for understanding processes that occur infrequently on the molecular scale, yet they are important for the long-time dynamics of complex molecular systems. One of these algorithms, transition path sampling (TPS), has become a standard technique to study such rare processes since no prior knowledge on the transition region is required. Most TPS methods generate new trajectories from old trajectories by selecting a point along the old trajectory, modifying its momentum in some way, and then "shooting" a new trajectory by integrating forward and backward in time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Econ
December 2025
Health Economic and Decision Sciences, Merck & Co., Inc, West Point, PA, USA.
Aim: To assess the cost-effectiveness of adjuvant pembrolizumab (Keytruda) versus routine observation of adult patients with stage IB (T2a ≥ 4 cm) -IIIA with programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) tumor proportion score (TPS) <50% who have undergone complete resection and platinum-based chemotherapy from the Canadian public healthcare payer perspective.
Materials And Methods: A Markov model was constructed to capture clinical and economic outcomes across four health states: disease-free (DF), local-regional recurrence (LR), distant metastases (DM), and death. Transition probabilities (TPs) from the DF state were populated using clinical trial data from KEYNOTE-091.
Environ Int
August 2025
Department of Biology and Evolution of Marine Organisms, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Villa Comunale 1, 80121 Naples, Italy. Electronic address:
Thousands of tire rubber particles (TPs) enter the marine environment every year, contributing to microplastic pollution. The toxicity of TPs can be related to the particles themselves or chemical additives, which can leach into seawater and potentially affect marine organisms. The current study presents new insights into TPs' impact on marine organisms' reproductive processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Part Ther
September 2025
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH 43210, USA.
Purpose: This paper describes the modeling of the kVue One Proton couch top (CQ Medical, Avondale, PA) for use in treatment planning system (TPS), and the verification of the calculated effect of the model in the TPS against measured radiological properties.
Material And Methods: The kVue One Proton couch top consists of a higher-density shell surrounding a lower-density core. The radiological properties of the kVue One Proton couch top, as assessed by range pullback of direct and oblique incidence proton beams, were measured and used to evaluate different density overrides in a model of the couch top base created in the TPS, RayStation 12ASP1 (RaySearch Laboratories, Stockholm, Sweden).
Int J Biol Macromol
August 2025
Joint International Research Laboratory of Agriculture and Agri-Product Safety of the Ministry of Education of China, Institutes of Agricultural Science and Technology Development, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, Jiangsu, 225009, China. Electronic address:
This study explores the development of environmentally friendly tea polyphenol (TP)-loaded natural polysaccharide-based nanofibrous films (FFs) using green electrospinning techniques for active packaging of pre-processed fish fillets. Three types of TPs were incorporated into an aqueous octenylsuccinylated starch (OSS)/pullulan (PUL) dispersion to produce TP/OSS/PUL-FFs, whose structural characteristics (appearance, chromaticity, and fiber morphology) and functional properties (antioxidant capacity, antibacterial activity, thermal stability, and water contact properties) were comprehensively evaluated. Among the FFs, TP3/OSS/PUL-FF exhibited the best performance, including the highest thermal degradation temperature (302.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF